Hayduk's work on American politics centers on elections and
voting, immigration and race, and social movements, including Democracy for All: Restoring
Immigrant Voting Rights in the U.S. (Routledge, 2006), Gatekeepers to the Franchise:
Shaping Election Administration in New York (Northern
Illinois University Press, 2005), From ACT UP to the WTO: Urban Protest and Community
Building in the Era of Globalization (Verso, 2002), and Democracy’s Moment: Reforming the
American Political System in the Twenty First Century
(Rowman and Littlefield, 2002). More recently, Hayduk has written
about immigration reform policy, elections in New York, and the
Occupy Wall Street movement, including “Radical Responses to
Neoliberalism: Immigrant Rights in the Global Era” (Dialectical Anthropology),
“New York State Elections and Election Management,” in Handbook of New York State Politics
(Oxford University Press, 2012), and “OWS and the
Anti-Globalization Movement,” in Occupying Political Science: The OWS Movement from New
York to the World (Palgrave, forthcoming). Hayduk's
current research project is an edited book and symposium (with
Tarry Hum), Immigrant Crossroads: Globalization,
Incorporation, and Place-Making in Queens, New York
(2015/2016).

Formerly a social worker, Hayduk worked in New York City
government as the Coordinator for the Voter Assistance Commission,
and consulted to policy organizations (NAACP, Demos, and The
Brennan Center). Hayduk is an editorial board member of the
journal Socialism and
Democracy, a co-founder of the Coalition to Expand Voting Rights, and an
active member of the Professional
Staff Congress (PSC). Hayduk is also a member of the New
York City Participatory Budgeting Research Board as well as
a member of the North American Participatory Budgeting
Research Board.

Courses:Current Controversies - Poverty amid Plenty:
The Politics of the 99% (PSCI 102), Urban Politics (PSCI
211), Political Parties and Elections (PSCI 218), Capitalism and
Democracy (PSCI 226), American Government Colloquium: The Politics
of Immigration (PSCI 229), American Political Thought (PSCI 273),
and Law and Immigration (Seminar; PSCI 382W).